We're two months into the Trump administration, and if you're wondering how Ohio's senators and members of the House of Representative rate in their support of President Donald Trump, FiveThirtyEight.com has just the tool for you.

The numbers-crunching website has a feature called Tracking Congress In The Age Of Trump that offers an updated tally of how often every member of the House and the Senate votes with or against the president.

The four main elements of it are as follows:

Trump score: How often a member of Congress votes in line with Trump's position

For instance, so far in the Trump presidency, Sen. Rob Portman, R-Cincinnati, has voted in support of Trump's position 96.6% of the time. (Here's the full list of votes on which the score is based.) Ohio gave Trump an 8.1 percentage point margin in the 2016 election, and based on that, FiveThirtyEight.com projects that a senator from Ohio would vote in line with Trump 76.8% of the time.

Portman's "Trump plus/minus," then, is +19.8, meaning he has to date been quite loyal to the president. Only 16 senators have a higher "Trump plus/minus" than Portman. (That Trump budget might be a challenge for Portman, though.)

It's a very different story, as you would expect, with Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Cleveland, though there's an interesting shading to the data.

Brown so far has voted in line with the Trump position 34.5% of the time, which is not a lot, obviously, but it's higher than 31 other Democrats. (Kirsten Gillibrand of New York is the most anti-Trump senator, voting with the president just 6.9% of the time.)

But Brown's "Trump plus/minus" of -42.3 is bested by only two other senators: Democrats Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin (-43) and Jon Tester (-47.8) of Montana. Those senators, like Brown, are Democrats who are opposed to most of the Trump agenda but represent states that went for Trump in 2016 and therefore have to keep an eye on their political viability.

Go here if you want to play around with the tool for House members. It's fun for political junkies.

FEELING TAXED

A Chagrin Falls resident is among the Wall Street Journal readers weighing in on a carbon tax proposal floated by two former U.S. secretaries of state and treasury.

The Journal runs a letter to the editor from Jim O'Brien that addresses a response from George Shultz and James Baker to the paper's recent editorial "The Carbon Tax Chimera."

Shultz and Baker argue that their carbon tax proposal is "a conservative, free-market, revenue-neutral, limited-government, internationally competitive approach to the potential threat of climate change that would eliminate the heavy hand of government regulation by the EPA." The Journal disagreed, as does O'Brien.

The Chagrin Falls resident writes the following:

"Taxing the successful producers who have earned their money and redistributing it as welfare payments to those who haven't is what's wrong with the carbon-tax proposal because it punishes the good and rewards the undeserving. I implore the American people and politicians to fight against this altruism that is undermining the American principle that money is private property that morally belongs to the person who earned it."

CRUISING

"This round-trip from Vancouver to Alaska aboard the incomparable luxury liner Crystal Serenity starts on July 29 and runs through August 8," the magazine says. "You'll enjoy 10 fantastic days of fabulous sights, as well as superb investment insights and inside scoops on cutting-edge developments in medicine and personal health."

Wealth experts on the cruise "will give you the analyses you need to successfully pursue profits in stocks and bonds amid all the uncertainties and various scenarios of these times," according to Forbes. "And you won't want to miss out on getting invaluable information from — and interacting with — Cleveland Clinic's acclaimed experts in the crucial areas of oncology and cardiology. Being able to talk with these superb specialists in a relaxed atmosphere is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."

It won't be cheap to learn how to make money and be healthy. Cruise fares are $4,895 per person.

Here is the list of experts, including those from the Clinic, who are taking part in the trip.